They met with General Manager of Inspire9 Footscray, Garry Williams, who spoke about their vision.

General Manager of Inspire9 Footscray, Garry Williams, with ACS President Anthony Wong.

“From our existence in Richmond, we’ve expanded over to a second site here in Footscray, and we basically run co-working and community engagement for the people working here and for the community,” he said.

“We’ve got three floors: a rooftop space, two primary levels and a basement space which is soon to become a makerspace.”

Since its inception in 2008, Inspire9 has been home to hugely successful start-ups such as Rome2Rio and CareMonkey, as well as holding offices for large-scale businesses such as Uber and NAB.

But never before a makerspace.

Equipped with 3D-printing, digital sewing and laser-cutting technologies, as well as a virtual reality lab, Fab9 will assist with the commercial development of the building’s tenants, while also focusing on community engagement.

“It'll be a mixture of commercial ventures, so people can come in utilise the tools or the technology within here for their commercial purposes, whether that be by producing products or offering bespoke training programs.

“There will also be a hybrid model, which is people working upstairs in the Inspire9 spaces and then manufacturing or making in this space.

“We’ll invite kids to learn how to use robots and ready-print, and people to come in and utilise the use of 3D printers to make prototypes of products as part of workshops for the community,” said Williams.

Construction on the makerspace is due to begin in November of this year, with a soft-launch planned for early 2018.

Inspire9 hopes that the new inner-west location will bring with it a different demographic.

Situated virtually next door to Victoria University, collaborations between the two institutions have already begun.

“We hosted their education hackathon last week and we've had their senior team, including their vice-chancellor, here for their strategic off-site meeting.

"Footscray is a heavily gentrifying area. A huge percentage of local small-business owners are working from home in a fast-growing region, so they'll focus in on a place that's offering them skills and educational up-skilling.

"It's not the type of space that people are used to in Melbourne, so it'll generate its own niche interest, as well as a lot of curious minds.”

Edward Pollitt

Edward Pollitt After starting as an intern for Information Age in 2017, Edward is now a full-time journalist with the publication. He covers a range of topics that relate to the technology sector, with a particular interest in start-ups, digital transformation and cyber security.